Epic (by which I mean long and over-reaching) journey of a young boy whose mother forces him to leave her, pretend to be Jewish and pretend to be another woman's son so that he will be evacuated from Ethiopia as part of "Operation Moses" to Israel in the early 80s.
In Israel, with his new family, he grows up, finds new meanings of faith and family and eventually, happiness and closure. Neat.
The problems, however, overshadowed -- they included awkward dialog, trite plot turns and a little too much deus ex machina to be enjoyable for me. The good things were the actor who played the young Schlomo and the historical context which I had never learned about before.
We decided we needed to coin another tag for these kinds of movies: the Heavy-Hearted Foreign Film.
A movie a week is all we ask. Well, that and a good cup of coffee...a few sunny days in a row wouldn't hurt either - and a nice bottle of wine every now and again. The movies should be good too...not Hollywood crap, but well-made, smart independent films. For geniuses. That's all.
Sunday, March 30, 2008
Sunday, March 23, 2008
Paranoid Park
Gus Van Sant is so good at being Gus Van Sant. He can take a relatively bland and conventional story, which this is, and make it contemplative, dark and dreamy. He revisits the milieu of Last Days or Elephant in that he takes relatively unheard of actors, or people who have never acted before, and thrusts them into his grainy, repeating-scene world. Jon and I noted that if he hadn't put his stamp on this, it would have been boring, with a capital b, but what we got was pure Van Sant -- almost too much so (enough with the young skateboard hotties taking their shirts off!) -- well lit, well shot, story well told.
Wednesday, March 19, 2008
Bab'Aziz
A stunningly beautiful and fascinating fairy tale. As we slowly progress through the story of Bab'aziz, we meet unusual and interesting characters whose lives intersect, seemingly at the whim of the storyteller. In this desert landscape, blind men journey without direction, wandering bands of musicians head toward "the gathering," humans become animals only to change back to humans and soul-seekers are made insane by their quests. I was simply in love with the granddaughter.Though she and her grandfather never say, "I love you" to one another, you can see it in their touch, their trust and their eyes. Thoroughly enjoyable.
Sunday, March 16, 2008
Chicago 10
I knew the story of the Chicago 8, but was curious who the additional 2 were. The movie didn't provide any answers, and Jon had to look it up after we watched the film. The mix of animation and archival footage was fun and funny and dramatic and I learned a ton about the trial and the actual events over the days that Abby Hoffman and Co. were involved. The other two were the lawyers who were actually slapped with several contempt of court charges during the trail in which the 8 were eventually found not guilty. Great soundtrack.
Tuesday, March 04, 2008
Be Kind Rewind
This is not the Michel Gondry we have met before. This is a new, lighter, less complicated and in some ways, less enjoyable Michel Gondry. But, we had to see this, knowing it wouldn't be Eternal Sunshine or The Science of Sleep, we had to see it, and I am glad we did.
Mos Def is left in charge of a video (actual VHS video) store while owner Danny Glover is away. Jack Black, through a completely implausible accident, ruins all the videos forcing the duo to remake all the films ('sweding' them). Black is the only person who could have played his character. In fact, I think he plays that character so much that we believe that is who Jack Black is. Loud, crazy, annoying, dim, enthusiastic. We buy it when he plays it. At least I do. So we go along with the goofy idea and find ourselves caught up in the fun.
Wonderful, whimsical cardboard cutouts on the sets, fancy camera angles to produce great visuals, a completely absurd plot and silly characters combined to carry this movie through. Mos Def was pitch perfect. It rode the line between sweet and schlocky, perfectly.
Mos Def is left in charge of a video (actual VHS video) store while owner Danny Glover is away. Jack Black, through a completely implausible accident, ruins all the videos forcing the duo to remake all the films ('sweding' them). Black is the only person who could have played his character. In fact, I think he plays that character so much that we believe that is who Jack Black is. Loud, crazy, annoying, dim, enthusiastic. We buy it when he plays it. At least I do. So we go along with the goofy idea and find ourselves caught up in the fun.
Wonderful, whimsical cardboard cutouts on the sets, fancy camera angles to produce great visuals, a completely absurd plot and silly characters combined to carry this movie through. Mos Def was pitch perfect. It rode the line between sweet and schlocky, perfectly.
Sunday, March 02, 2008
Military Intelligence and You
Sarcastic and spoofy take on a WWII military training film of the 40s. The idea is that if you say "Iraq" each time they say "Germany", the results are hee-larious, but it really misses the mark. Kind of too true to be funny, what had real biting political commentary potential was basically wasted on Airplane!-style jokes and repetitive melodrama/slapstick. It has a few good moments for sure, but not enough to carry the idea.
Saturday, March 01, 2008
Cidade dos Homens (City of Men)
Intense drama set in the favelas of Brazil. Based on a TV show that was a spin-off of the movie City of God by the same director. The themes of fatherhood, friendship and responsibilities are right on the surface, but kept interesting by the phenomenal performances by the two leading men. The sweltering heat and gang violence and poverty are so close you can feel the pressure and the need for things you can count on. Not complicated or surprising but a very well told story with hope as a footnote in the lives of the characters.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)